’s Nobel Laureate; a world acclaimed writer, and
celebrated crusader for social justice and human rights. Professor AkinwandeOluwoleSoyinkarequires no other introduction.

Professor
Michael Mbabuike

Nigerian Linguist and Poet, Michael Mbabuike is Professor and Chair of the Humanities Department/Africana Studies, Hostos Community college of the City University of New York.After obtaining a B.A [Honors] from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, he
proceeded to the University of Sorbonne,
Paris, France, for an M.A. and D.Litt.He has published several
academic articles and books including the much admired Poems of Memory Trips [Poetry,
Sungai, 1998]

Professor
OkeyNdibe

OkeyNdibe is an associate Professor of Literature at Simon’s Rock of Bard College in Great
Barrington, MA, USA. He
was born in Yola, Nigeria, in 1960. After a distinguished career as a magazine editor in Nigeria, he
moved to the US in 1988 to become the founding editor of African
Commentary, an award-winning and widely acclaimed magazine, published
by the Nigerian novelist, ChinuaAchebe. He has been a visiting writer-in-residence, and assistant professor of English at
ConnecticutCollege, and has contributed poems
to An Anthology of New West African Poets, edited by the Gambian poet, TijanSallah. He has also published essays in a number of North American, British and Nigerian
magazines, and writes a weekly column for the Guardian; one of Nigeria's most respected daily newspapers. Professor Ndibe is the author of the critically acclaimed
novel, Arrows of Rain.

OmoyeleSowore

A former student leader
who survived torture under the Abacha regime,
OmoyeleSowore is a
pro democracy activist, and is widely considered his generation’s most respected and outspoken investigative journalist.

THE INTERVIEW

Sir, in a historic vote,

Prof. Wole Soyinka

the National Assembly recently rejected a move to amend the constitution and extend
the tenure of the President and State governors. What is your reaction to this development?

I believe it serves as an impetus for PRONACO to accelerate the tempo
of presenting a people's constitution to the nation, and a lesson to all sit-tight aspirants on the African
continent!

ON: Nigerian leaders seem to have an
obsession with self-perpetuation. This was the case with Gowon, Babangida,
Abacha—and now, Obasanjo. What do you think accounts for
this fascination, and what strategies must Nigerians adopt to combat it?

This situation, of course, is not peculiar
to Nigerians; but I suppose we are very

much bothered by it, because we are a nation of 120 million people, at the minimum. I think it is quite right and
proper that 120 million people, of whom close to half are adults, must feel insulted by the notion that one, single,
person—each time, it’s the one person—who feels
entitled, or believes that only he has the ability, the intelligence, the political savvy, to rule a people as
large and diverse as we are. I travel everywhere, and I can say this: There is no where in the world I go to that
I don’t stumble across a Nigerian. And that Nigerian is in a very highly regarded position; whether it’s in the
sciences, the arts, sociology, or in technology. Nigerians are everywhere.

Part of the frustration of Nigerians, in
addition to the lack of fulfillment in every facet, is a deep-seated sense of hurt about the quality of leadership
in Nigeria. The average Nigerian thinks -- how do you expect me to stay in a place where someone like this
is not only in charge of the nation, but actually thinks that he alone is entitled to rule the country? And so,
it’s a really serious issue; it has consequences beyond the immediate issue of power. And how do we combat the
situation? Well, I think we have to decide that it is time to take a stand. It is
time to take a stand. I know we decided this in the past; during Babangida’s time, yes. We decided it during Shagari’s time, and we also decided to take a stand during the
Abacha regime. But I think
that we really, really, really have to decide that enough is enough, and that this situation has got to stop. Even
if it means moving into a high gear of resistance, I think we have to solve this really serious problem, once and
for all.

MM: Are you advising us to be like Ogun--the great creator and destroyer? I
mean, the winner is always right, as the saying goes; but how are the people of Nigeria
to act in a situation where the end often justifies the means?

It is a multi pronged approach, I agree,
and we are already operating now. We are challenging, not only the present system, but the past. I’m talking about
the work of the on-going National Conference. Many people who thought the process through will understand why the
present regime was so desperate to stop that conference. Because it goes beyond merely providing the constitution,
offering an alternative constitution to the people; the methodology dictates that it is time to restore sovereignty
to the people.

This is why Obasanjo and his government were so scared of the conference.
They threatened at the beginning that we would be charged with treason; the police breathed fire, and said they
would disrupt the gathering. We said no: sovereignty lies with the people, and the people have not yet enjoyed
that sovereignty; they have not been allowed to express their sovereign will for so many decades. And as long as
we are operating a constitution bequeathed by the military—even if it is the most perfect constitution in the world—the
people must still have a voice and say, we’ve examined this constitution, and endorse it, in toto. But the people must have a chance to debate, before making
it their choice.

And now Obasanjo takes that constitution, quickly summons his own confab
for political tinkering and gerrymandering, and sends Mr. Mantu round to present it. Now Nigerians are seeing the hollowness, the ludicrousness of this exercise,
and they are comparing it to what is going on right now at Shangisha, in Lagos.
And more and more people are coming on board, because they now understand what is really going on. Groups, bodies,
geographical areas, that before had been apathetic—labor, South-South, various civil organizations and ethnic groups—are
coming in. And it is a statement being made. That’s number one. The second stage is that the people in Nigeria
must get ready; be prepared to march to the various state houses of assembly if they attempt to tamper with this
constitution in order to establish and perpetuate the reign of terror. We leave what the third stage might be…let’s
concentrate on those two; the preparation to march to the houses of assembly if they attempt to cheat the people
of Nigeria, once again.

OS: I am more interested in the third
stage, because I have experienced the last two stages you mentioned. Many in my generation are tired and frustrated
with the idea of speaking to the press, marching in protest only to get shot at and killed. I want to ask directly
about the 3rd stage engagement. At what point
do you think people should start considering a higher level of resistance, for example, armed struggle; considering
that all these characters you described are not only brutal, but wicked, and have no regard for lifeand the rights of Nigerians to organize peacefully?

I have been issuing very loud warnings
to the police, telling them not to allow themselves to be used. Nigerians have experienced far too much brutality
at the hands of the military and the police, as well as the secret services—especially under Abacha. I think the stage of a critical mass is very close to
us. And if, under what is supposed to be a democratic dispensation, the police turn out to be instruments for the
furtherance of state terror, that third stage may be reached sooner than many people imagine. It is not I who will
advocate it; I can only warn that I see the signs. And I can see signs of what you just said. I know I understand
this, and people are saying it. There is a level of frustration. It is because we don’t want things to reach that
stage that we keep shouting these warnings: the military and police -- do not allow yourselves to be used in instituting
terror, because if the third stage is reached, you will have to answer for your crimes against the people. One is fervently hoping that that
ultimate stage will not be reached. But all I can do is scream warnings, and also engage in the mobilization of
people for popular protests.

MM: Prof, in the third stage engagement,
the winners are, supposedly, in the right. In other words, people do everything in their power not to become the
loser, because ultimately the winner is right. You have subscribed to that theory before in your writings.

That the winner is right?

MM: Yes.

No, absolutely not; not at all… The winner
seizes power, yes; but it doesn’t mean that the winner is necessarily right! I don’t subscribe to that, at all.
If I may just say this; this warning is being demonstrated in what is happening in the Delta region, the oil region.
And the intransigence has been partly fuelled by the demonstration of the present regime to stay in power through
might and through fraud. And so the militants in that area are saying: alright, we’ll have to speak the language
of force. They don’t want the continuation of the present regime, because it will only carry on the policies of
the past. The Delta region has seen, over the last few years, that their lot has never improved, has not become
better, at all. And so why should they now subscribe to this self-perpetuation that guarantees their continuing
impoverishment?

ON: We have seen that most Nigerians
are opposed to any plot to elongate the term of the president. However, a substantial number are worried about
who comes next. Some think it might be Babangida, a terrible, terrible, prospect, indeed. Some think it might be Atiku or Marwa; neither of them, an attractive choice. What kind of Nigeria
are we to have so that we don’t continue this rigmarole of frustration and hopelessness?

Well, I’m very glad that you stressed the
fact of what, and not who comes next. Each time we want to get rid of a nasty at the top, people always say, yes; but who do you have to replace him? That question I never take at all,
because we know that there are an abundance of people. Even the party I inaugurated -- when we started working
on this party about two years ago—was actually inaugurated in Benin more than two years ago. I said at the second meeting: you should all start looking for people
we can back for high offices in this nation. We should be able to say -- look, this is the kind of person we want;
wherever he is, this is the person we’re going to back. So what comes next? The vision which we have -- most of
us in PRONACO -- is a completely
decentralized nation in which the various constituents are free to develop at their own pace, choose their own
priorities, and decide their own future. If they want to concentrate first on health as a priority, they should
be able to do so within the guaranteed resources that they have. Remove as much
power from the center as possible, leaving the center
just for common defense and so on and so forth.

We have attached to the constitution now
what is, in effect, a people’s charter; the minimum that every citizen has a right to expect from the state, from
the collectivity. And this we want to be part of the constitution, so that individuals and groups can actually
push for these rights on the strength of the documents, the protocols that we plan to hold the nation together.
I am not so romantic as to think that overnight, we are going to have a transformed society in which suddenly,
services are available for the disabled.But
this is the goal, and anyone who is not working towards the attainment of these goals, the people have a right
to remove from office.

OS: There is another question regarding
the political party issue--why can’t the activists have one single political movement in which there is a WoleSoyinka, FemiFalana, GaniFawehinmi, and all the “big names” in the movement? There does not seem to be unity in the movement. How
would you respond to that?

Well, at one time, we were driven apart
by ideological rigidities; but I think a lot of that is in the past now. I don’t know if you listened to Gani’s statement when Beko died? He said: “I don’t care about the past; all I know
is that we must all come together.” It is a critical moment for all of us. I have sent word to him to say -- Gani, stand by; we have work to do! We are
reaching out in many directions. I think we’re going to see a change between now and the next elections.

Recent reports in Nigerian Newspapers suggest that you
may be interested in running for the presidency. What role can Nigerians play to make this a reality?

Nigerians will have to learn that working with others to
create a new, progressive, platform as an alternative to existing choices is not the same as nursing
political ambition.

In other parts of Africa, say Zimbabwe the leaders have been able to hang on to power, despite opposition. Despite the recent vote in
the national assembly, is the concern over… In other words “Are you confident that Nigerians will be able to stop
Obasanjo’s third term plan.”

I am confident, I am pretty confident!
He may hope to turn himself into another Mugabe; however, Nigeria is not Zimbabwe. I have said to people, “back to the trenches.” The signs are there, the signs are there; but we
must not let him get the “Mugabe complex.”

Sir; how do you respond to the phenomenon of "godfatherism"
in Nigerian politics?

The greatest disservice President Obasanjo has done to the
nation is to have promoted the cult of godfatherism, its illegalities, its naked violence, and its corruption.

ON: Your new book, You
Must Set Forth At Dawnhas just come out. You are not only a writer, but an activist,
an agent provocateur…something of a conscience of the nation. How do you reconcile such diverse demands?

I don’t know about

Prof. Wole Soyinka at Princeton University Commencement robed for an honorary degree
(2005)

being the conscience of the nation. I’m satisfied with being my own conscience, and perhaps that’s what drives
me. I have never really separated the two functions, which means that I have never given myself the burden of trying
to reconcile incompatibles. We are all, before anything else, citizens. We belong to an environment and have a
sense of community. Being part of a community means enjoying the security of being part of a family, but at the
same time, accepting responsibilities towards that family. I mean, a nation is an extended family. So I have never
seen my function as being different from the functions of any other citizen, except, of course, that my profession
happens to be that of the word. And so I use that tool in the interest of my responsibilities. There’s no contradiction,
whatsoever.

Okay, from time to time I resent it very
strongly. Let’s say I’m in the midst of, or planning a particular creative project. I’ve become internally committed
to it, and something external impinges—like, what you’ve just mentioned; the politics of one’sexistence—and of such urgency, that I have to abandon
my project. And then there come strong resentment: Oh my God, not again, not again. When will I be able to plan
my life according to my immediate moods, and so on? But it’s only in terms of those periods that there is resentment.

ON: You’ve just published a political
memoir that spans your many years of active engagement in the political life of Nigeria.
Yet, when you wrote Ake:
The Years of Childhood, you suggested that you would never venture into the adult sectors of your life in a memoir. You
subsequently breached that pledge when you wrote Ibadan: ThePenkelemesi Years,a book you justified on the ground that it was a way of engaging
with the immediate political provocation at that time. Could you speak to the importance of this latest memoir,
in terms of any political impulse that informed it?

Laughs…I
first and foremost apologize to everyone for being foolish enough to say that I would not write my biography beyond
the age of eleven. It was very presumptuous of me, because I underestimated the amount of provocation I would receive
later in life. But ideally, ideally, I think one really should not go beyond the age of innocence in writing one’s
autobiography. And the age of innocence ends at about eleven. After that, you’re no longer spontaneous. A child
is a spontaneous being; that is why that period in one’s life is the most truthful. At a later age, you begin
to hedge a little bit, create gaps-- deliberate ones, which could even be accounted as lies--on account of other
people, or simply because you think the actions involved in that period are not yet over. So whilst you don’t set
out to be dishonest in writing a book about adult life, you cannot be totally truthful—because you’re hiding something;
you have to. I wrote Ibadan—it is very difficult for me to say this—but
I wrote Ibadan, because
I was about to engage in a course of action, and I wasn’t sure what the end result would be. I could end up in
jail…I was returning to Nigeria; I had been in exile, a forced exile—this was during the period for the actualization of June 12.
And I was asked to go and testify before the Congressional hearing in Washington about the elections. After testifying I returned to London, and then M.K.O. Abiola, who was also in London at the time, decided that he couldn’t go back home. We met and he pleaded
with me to please stay a while longer to take care of the international aspect of things. And I was feeling very,
very frustrated. I knew that we had to go and fight this particular battle to an end.

During the weeks of waiting—I mean, I came
out really not expecting to stay longer than a week, and I stayed for weeks—during the weeks of waiting, I projected
what we might have to do to force Babangida out of office, and I realized that this was not going to be child’s play. I had envisaged a very
serious action by the people. So I thought, as I sat down twiddling my fingers for two weeks, that I had better
reconcile myself to using the two weeks to set down something about my past, if only for the coming generations
to understand what is sometimes required of one in times of political crisis. That was the real motivation for
Ibadan, and it was going to be a shorter book actually; but my editor—you
know what editors are like… “Why don’t you flesh this out a bit more? No, people want to know about this; well,
what happened to you in school?” I’d say, no; that’s not what I wanted to write about, that’s not the issue. But
the reply would be: “No, it’d be more interesting if you did this or that,” and that’s how Ibadancame to be. It was not intended.

O.N: But what triggered your writing of You Must Set Forth At Dawn?

In the first instance, I was fed up with
people—you know the kind of critics I am

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talking about. These critics; it’s not enough for them to write about what you’ve written; they fasten on your
life, and you feel that you’re being eaten by other
people. I mean that literally. And I have one particular so-called critic in mind; a British school teacher—I won’t
mention his name—who takes pieces
of your life and distorts them. I wrote him once to say, “The trouble with you is that you have no sense of humor,
and therefore are incapable of understanding certain things which happened around me. So stop writing about me,
for God’s sake.” But no, he is obsessed with WoleSoyinka. If
I sneeze somewhere, he’s going to write a minor thesis on it, and give his reasons as to why I sneezed at that
particular moment. May you never go through that feeling; the feeling that somebody is eating you alive, and the
mush that is coming out, that he’s regurgitating, is very sickening.

So experiences like that began to make
me feel, well…hadn’t I better start setting certain things down? But when I actually conceived the writing was
during the period of Abacha’s
regime—and the fight involved in getting him out struck me as being likely to be even more deadly than what was
planned for the ousting of Babangida.
So I said to myself: well, may be it’s time again to start putting something down. The occasion again was the uncertainty
about the future—it was a time, as you know, when I was wearing all kinds of disguises, because I was being hunted
all over the world, and I wasn’t about to give up. And to tell you the truth, when I look back on how repetitive
life had become, it seemed to me that I should write these things down in a book for the young generation, so that
they would be able to see the Sisyphean task one finds himself burdened with; may be they’d find some other means
of contesting the unacceptable impositions of life. So the motivation was to talk to the younger generation; but
of course, by the time you start writing, it becomes a work on its own, and goes beyond that. That was the reason
for the memoirs.

ON:
You mention the repetitive pattern of life; one pattern for you seems to take on
life as an exile. You were jailed by YakubuGowon, and
subsequently went on exile. IbrahimBabangida exiled you. Abacha did the same, and now you are on
some form of exile. President OlusegunObasanjo’s government has decided
that your voice must be discounted, if not silenced, on account of what a government spokesman described as your
godlessness. How does it feel to be a citizen of a nation where those in power feel compelled to physically remove
you from the national space or to contrive to remove your voice from the national discourse?

I have become reconciled to the fact that
there will always be those who don’t want to hear bad news—that is, bad news for them. They don’t understand that
sometimes what they consider bad news for them is really good news—because it means a call to self-examination
vis-à-vis their conduct towards the people they’re supposed to rule over. It’s a call to their conscience,
a call to re-think. But unfortunately, power ever loves only its own, and, therefore, no contrary voices. So I
have accepted that as part of the occupational hazard one has to confront. What we are going through right now
is perhaps one of the saddest chapters of my entire political career. To find, at the head of government, someone
who has run that country as a dictator, unchallenged!
And then who virtually had one foot over the edge of extinction—eventually pulled back by the hair thanks to the
efforts of people like you and me, the international community, and the internal struggle--in other words, a man
who has tasted the other side of life.

He comes out, and is put back in control
of that same space, that same real estate. Instead of just staying one term—in fact, his second term was already
too long--instead of saying, okay, may be I can now put into structures, actualize, and realize those ideals I
thought of in my earlier coming, and then take a bow and go out, he’s planning to subvert the constitution, and
doing so in the crudest way possible. This is through bribery, intimidation, blackmail, the misuse of state agencies,
sending the SSS (State Security
Service) to break up opposition meetings in halls that have been paid for by people, tear gassing, right, left,
and center, the opposition either in Kaduna or in Osun state. That’s why I say it’s so sad to see this happening again when one has become a septuagenarian.
These crimes are being committed by somebody who, for a start, is supposed to have entered the phase of self-reflection,
of wise reflection. So there you are; another cycle begins.

OS:I’d like to ask—in view of a statement you made recently, that you’re worried about
the next generation in terms of activism; are you going to set up a foundation that can sustain some of your legacies
in the struggle so that young people may find in you a source of support and inspiration?

First of all, I have a foundation;

Prof. Wole Soyinka at Bard College

but that foundation sort of wound into disuse when I went into exile. I don’t think in practical terms of a legacy,
enshrining a legacy, passing on a legacy. No, no, no! As far as I’m concerned, it is up to the new generation to
look at us—there are so many of us in the country—and then select what they want from us. The foundation was set
up really for artists, to assist artists in need, to create a kind of space or refuge where, for a few months a
year, people can reside. That’s what I spent my Nobel Prize money on, actually. I found it wasn’t enough, and I
took on an intensive teaching stint to bolster it. But you know that Abacha’s soldiers went and smashed up the place? They pretended they were looking for a clandestine radio...
We are restoring it, however; it is coming on quite well. That’s what my foundation does. But in terms of ideals,
socio-political ideals, I think that one’s activism is the legacy—if one must use that word.

Hopefully, how one has responded to events—and
this includes the political party that was set up, which I was informed a few days ago had been registered; its
registration saved us a lot of litigation, because we were going to go to court to fight this all the way. The
principle of the right to associate culturally, socially, politically is for me so fundamental to social existence
that I cannot accept the notion of an arbitrary body deciding whether I am qualified to set up a political party
or not. But it looks as if we’ve been registered. That party will be there for frustrated young people, idealistic
young people—and also older people; I’m not discriminating. So young people who say we have no political platform
with which we can associate—all right, there’s a fresh one which can be owned by the young generation. That’s the
whole purpose of my setting up the party.

MM:What is your advice to young African writers? What should be their mission?

First of all, I always say to them when
I’m asked that question; write, just write. Just write, and prepare a basket to receive your rejection slips. Receive
your rejection slips and write again. And write again. That’s the first thing. The second one is truthfulness.
A number of our writers, I’m afraid, wasted a lot of their talent in writing, their genuine talent and creative
authenticity, by being too ideologically driven. That does not mean one should not have an ideology in writing. One
should allow, however, that ideology to percolate through the manipulation of character and so on and so forth—not
to begin with the ideology and then you want to weave a work of fiction around it. I believe that’s the wrong way
to go about it, because then you’re driven by something external to your real, genuine, creative impulse. But if
you’re guided, if you’ve already internalized a political ideology, it would percolate through what you write.
A number of second generation writers spend too much time trying to ideologize their writings, and then end up writing propaganda. And they are capable of much better. So be
very truthful to your impulse; don’t allow exterior dictates to control the direction of your creative impulse.

MM:
In Dance of the Forest,
Black history is a tragic cycle of errors; but you do not appear to indict, accuse,
suggest or recommend punishment for white complicity. You seem to be very hard on the Black characters. Why so?

This was 1960, and we were about to obtain
our independence. For me, that moment was a moment of very deep and honest introspection. There comes a moment
when the child matures, and if the child keeps looking back and saying, “My teacher did this, my father did this;
therefore, I cannot lift a foot until I have screamed loud and long,” well, that’s one way of doing it. On the
other hand I can say --to hell with these people who tried to mess up my life; I now want to seize hold of my life.
And for that, you begin with introspection, with self-criticism, analyzing just where you have come from. When
you’ve gone over that phase, when you have really established yourself, you’re strong enough now to tell the others
where to go. After Dance of the Forest, both my
political writings and some fictional work obviously deal with the role of the white man in our affairs.

The destruction of the organic system of
productivity in our society is something which I have stressed over and over again—also pointing a finger at who
destroyed it. Whether you talk about the slave trade or you talk about the colonial experience, the intervention
in our proper development, our own self-direction; whether you talk about the Berlin partition of Africa in the interest of factories in cosmopolitan Europe—all these feature in my later writing. But in 1960,
at the moment of independence, I wanted us to take a rigorous look at our history, at what we had done to ourselves.
I believed that if we performed that self-assessment, then we could build a very strong society.

OS: In view of that, how is it that
you are not an arrow head of the reparations movement?

But you’re so wrong. I’m not the arrowhead
of the movement, but I have a very substantive role in that. In fact, I have been taken up by all kinds of outside
commentators who in fact accuse me of trying to shift the responsibility for the parlous condition of Africa to the European colonizers; but I point out that
these are the facts. I have lectured even at the World Bank—and have exhausted this view. I was with the late MKOAbiola during the reparation movement. I went further, and said that all those who have enslaved Africans,
those who treated Africans with disdain, and who have commercialized their disdain against black people, must pay
reparation—and that includes the Arab world. The failure to listen and act on that, to bring the Arab world to
face the enormity of its crime against us—it is that failure that we’re still witnessing in Darfur
today! Trying to exempt one side, because we’re all victims of colonialism, and therefore we should overlook this
past, you are insulting me a second time. You committed a crime against me, my race, my people, my sensibilities; now you are saying it didn’t happen?

When a woman is raped, one of the things
she demands is that the rapist first admits the crime. For that rapist to continue denying the crime is itself
a second rape. That is the way women explain it. And the same thing is true for us. In fact, I have gone so far
as to propose that what we are looking for is not monetary reparation, although that certainly figures into the
equation; whether through debt forgiveness or whatever. But the return of all the looted African treasures would
be a beginning towards an acknowledgement of a historic guilt of immeasurable magnitude.

MM: I would like to follow up on the
last question. In a lecture you gave at Harvard in 1997, you argued for reparation for African Americans as well
as for any group robbed of its humanity. How do you respond to the African American economist, Thomas Sowell, who
contended that the relative economic backwardness of African Americans is significantly attributed to the backwardness
of the family structure?

If he is saying that the family structure
was weakened, in fact destroyed, by the experience of slavery, which reduced, in fact, virtually rubbished, the
authority of the parental sector of the family—there, I agree. We saw the same thing happen in South Africa in our own time. The family
structure was weakened to such an extent that the children lost a sense of recognition of even assertive authority.
And then all authority became useless. So, we find extremist actions; what I’d like to call thoughtless, unstructured,
extremist actions. The same thing is applicable to the black man in the United States. But I think that the
restoration of the family structure must be taken in hand without further delay, without looking back.

MM: You have been accused of Godlessness...

Oh yes!

MM: And have you now become spiritual?

The answer to that is yes…I think

Prof. Wole Soyinka and Beko Kuti

I am a very spiritual person. The person who said I was Godless knows nothing about me; he probably felt he had
to say –“You shouldn’t listen to somebody who doesn’t believe in God.” But surely, his God is not my God; that
much is clear (Laughter…). I am convinced that I couldn’t have survived this long, especially my period of solitary
confinement in prison, if I wasn’t deeply spiritual. However, I am not a worshiper; I don’t believe in the exteriorization
of intuitions. I believe that intuitions are one’s ability to commune with other human beings and the forces we
are surrounded by. They are internal things, exercises we can employ to strengthen that ability that all human
beings have; but they are not necessarily connected with attending church services on Sunday, or going to the mosque
on Friday. You go to church on Sunday, and then you go and pray, “God may I never be caught with these couple of
millions that I have just stashed away in my account.” You go to the mosque on Friday, and then preach that because
of some Danish cartoonist somewhere, people should then go and slaughter innocent people. I am not for that kind
of religion. Spirituality is discipline.

OS: Another important question for my
generation is the issue of confraternities for which you’ve had a fair share of beating from the religious right
as well as secular groups, including the government. What is your take on what is happening on Nigerian university
campuses today? Do you feel you have done enough to bring an end to the mindless blood-thirstiness on our campuses,
and the gangsters who are operating these cults?

A similar issue is being raised here in
the United States--because you know what happens on campuses in this country. You know that fraternities and sororities
are part and parcel of the U.S
university culture; that, in fact, universities allocate houses for them, and actually fund them. And if the members
misbehave, of course, they are punished -- as has happened in one or two places. But nowhere have we seen the kind
of evil that has taken over Nigerian campus so-called fraternities. I don’t even call them fraternities; you rightly
used the word “cults.” What is taking place on our Nigerian campuses today are, in reality, cult activities!
The original fraternities were never cults. Until today, the members of the university campus fraternities I founded
are everywhere in the world. One chapter will be hosting my book signing in Oakland. They have citations because of their community and social work. They have citations from mayors,
town councils…everywhere. They are in Japan. They got fed up with what is happening on our campuses, and said: look--we have a philosophy,
and our philosophy guides our existence wherever we happen to be.

Now those ones referring to themselves
as fraternities today on our campuses are common criminals. They are criminals who are backed by political godfathers
and academic godfathers. I have cited the example of the vice chancellor of a university who employed the services
of these cults. They became his security outfit. You had to go through them in order to reach the VC.
He gave them cars, gave them money. The guilt, the crime really, is a crime of society. This is what I have been
stressing to people. When I speak about this issue, even when I made a documentary, not long ago, people think
erroneously that I am trying to exonerate myself, because I started the first fraternity in Nigeria. I think they have holes in
their heads! Did I start the Road Safety Corps, because I was guilty of killing people on the roads? I saw something
very wrong in society; the egomania of drivers, their arrogance, was killing friends, my students, my colleagues
on the road, and I decided to start the Road Safety Corps in response to that phenomenon. And so my activities
in trying to open the eyes of society to what is happening on campuses has to do with my over-reactive sense of
responsibility as a citizen to any kind of anomaly in the world as a whole. It has nothing to do with whether
I started the first fraternity or not. Anybody who thinks that what we started then is what is going on now is
living in a different world!

I have a few prescriptions. The first thing
is that you stop referring to members of these fraternities as students. When they commit a crime, they are criminals,
and should be rightly treated as such and jailed. Those who kill, torture, or throw acid on one another over females
and similarly inane rivalries should be treated like rapists and arsonists. As long as we keep calling these reprobates
members of fraternities, we are glorifying their existence. No! So many of them are, in actuality, armed robbers;
they associate with robber barons and receive stolen goods. During my research, just to find who was behind these
characters, we made a lot of unbelievable discoveries. There are highly placed public and society figures, including
police commissioners and military officers who protect their children when they commit obvious criminal offences!

ON: Allow me to ask this question since
we are talking tangentially about our educational system; it seems, in the view of many, that the Nigerian university
educational system has collapsed. There used to be a time when people like you and ChinuaAchebe and other outstanding scholars happily taught in Nigerian universities. I refer to that period
as our renaissance moment. But during the Babangida and Abacha
regimes, there was a flight of intellectuals out of the country.

Oh, the flight began even before Babangida’s time...

ON:What then is your view of the state of education in Nigeria?
If you see a decline, what do you ascribe it to, and what is the remedy?

The problem has to do with power versus
intellect. Those who are obsessed with power cannot stand intellect. From Gowon’s time, the universities have been under siege; a situation that has severely escalated with every
dictatorial regime. The suspicion, the hatred of intellectualism has deepened, becoming almost a credo for successive
governments. Obasanjo—during
his first coming—you remember his assault on the universities? It’s become a habit with military administrations.
Unfortunately, the university dons played into the hands of power. People who should demonstrate and behave with
professional pride, actually went a-begging: “This is my CV sir; please sir, I want to be on this commission, I
want to be in this parastatal...”
Then, of course, the choice of vice chancellors…oh my God. One vice chancellor earned the name of “gate keeper”
to a politician, a political leader in Ibadan, because he was always at the man’s gate opening
doors for visitors. So we, in the universities, allowed its breakdown to happen.

The thing is what can we do to restore
the integrity of campuses? The first thing is this: we have too many university campuses at the moment. The teaching
capacity has been spread so thin that the quality of teaching has declined tremendously. Then there is poverty
to be dealt with. Universities have been deliberately impoverished. Even when I taught in the University of Ife,
we bought books with our own money, critical textbooks, for the departmental library. And we put the books under
lock and key so that people—students—could have access to books and current journals.

Whether one is talking about the disciplines
of the humanities, medicine, or engineering in Nigeria, it’s clear that educational standards have fallen. But there are people attempting to revive our
universities by appealing to alumni for help. I have participated in a fundraising dinner in which various people
pledged to resuscitate dormitories, laboratories, a vice chancellor’s office, and so forth. So this effort has
begun; it’s very much the time to start off. Some of our millionaires should please bring their money back—at least
a fraction of it—from Switzerland, from Saudi Arabia, and assist in rebuilding Nigerian universities.

We need a drastic re-start. I insist that
our universities should be closed down for a minimum of one year, so that we can go back to the drawing board.
People may think this a drastic measure and, perhaps, excessive—but I insist that you can’t use band aid to cover
cancer. This period has to be very well planned, because you can’t just throw students out on the streets. But
I believe that the population of Nigerian students can easily be absorbed and employed -- with very good planning
-- for a year in national service, by various arms; not just the state, but the private sector. They may be sent
out to earn a responsible living as part of their national service, so that they, in fact, perform their national
service in that year. At the same time, a congregation of Nigerian universities should be actively involved in
fund raising as well as forming committees to harmonize courses, and also study the various campuses to see which
ones are actually functioning at the university level, and not merely as higher institutions. And this doesn’t
apply to private universities, by the way. The private universities—I haven’t visited them, though I understand
they’re pretty good—this doesn’t affect them.

And this shouldn’t affect those institutions
that feel that they’re all right. However, those institutions who accept that they do have a real problem in reestablishing
educational standards, I think, should join this exercise voluntarily. And that’s another thing, by the way. When
I say that these universities should take a year off, I’m not advocating that the government should close down
universities. I don’t understand why people should think this, at all. What I am asking of the university communities
is to have the autonomy to re-examine themselves, and hopefully come to the conclusion I reached many years ago:
that unless they voluntarily close themselves down and institute a collective congregation—including staff, students,
town and gown, all the various facets--I don’t think any achievements can be made.

OS: You rightly mentioned that people
are criticizing your suggestion to close down certain universities. People believe that the Obasanjo regime, for example, might actually be thrilled for
this to happen. Without the presence of university students, public officials can plan to embezzle as much money
as is possible. This is why people argue for the closing down of Aso Rock, before anything else, and then putting someone there who is responsive to your suggestion.
If the universities close down now--as you know, the vice chancellors are appendages of the federal and state governments--this
will prevent any autonomy of the universities. You know, professor, that these vice chancellors are marionettes
of people in power. Can you address this contradiction?

WS:
It is not a contradiction. You’re saying that if students are away from the campuses, the people in government
would be free to be as corrupt as they want. But many of the students have been co-opted, in any case; has corruption
gone down, has the malfeasance of the regime diminished? Isn’t the student union of the nation, at the moment,
calling for the extension of Obasanjo’s
stay? Many of the students have been co-opted; they have lost direction. They have failed to understand what the
mission of students should be. Some of them, in fact, don’t even understand what student culture is all about.
You might have read in the papers that I became so mad at a group of them, because they had a grievance and came
and disrupted Beko’s funeral.
It was such a mannerless and
crude thing that I didn’t expect from students! But you see; they haven’t had the chance to absorb a positive student
culture.

Now, left to me, I agree with you—I’d close
down Aso Rock tomorrow. I have
been trying to close down Aso
Rock for many years. Who is going to object to that? I don’t. So if you have a means of doing that, I’m with you
all the way. But in the meantime, what do we do? We have to leave Aso Rock to try and mend itself as best as it can. We in civil society should try and urge civil society
of its funk. There’s a serious problem in civil society; sometimes civil society is its own worst enemy. So we’ve
got to tackle all these with both hands and both feet, preferably together; but if you can’t do it all at once,
then do it one by one!

MM: Back to the theme and theories of
the god of Ogun and Ogunnism—the one that destroys and rebuilds--how
do we connect this with what is happening today in Nigeria?
What concrete action can be taken by the people, without calling for killings, destructive behavior; how can we
save ourselves from what is taking place in the country?

That’s a huge question. I think the mistake
some of us make is that unless there is a comprehensive form of action taking place simultaneously, we cannot
save the nation or the society. I know that for totalistic action, we must have a holistic picture of society,
as well as a holistic strategy. But we can’t practice all this at one and the same time. No society is really geared
towards that kind of transformation. And so we must begin somewhere. Strengthening civil society is what many people
now realize is actually part of the beginning. We’ve got to recognize that the salvation of society rests more
on civil society than on government. And so we begin strengthening civil society, whether one is talking about
women’s organizations, civil liberties organizations, committees for civil defense, lawyers, and so on.

The labor movement, of course, is a critical
part of that—so that we don’t have the kind of abortive march that took place, for instance, the other day, and
ended up as just a march. You’ve got to organize in such a way that there’s a step beyond. The march becomes a
platform for the advancement of labor claims. That’s the first step. The second is to use that platform to strengthen
democracy. This democracy is not a mystical thing. Democracy is participation, accountability, instituting and
overseeing checks and balances, defining the limitations of power, and ensuring that those limitations are observed.
Ensuring that there is a common recourse for justice, and that means strengthening the judiciary and defending
the judiciary. The judiciary has been rubbished by this regime in a way that is unprecedented. This regime
flouts the decisions of the judiciary. And when I talk about strengthening the civil society I am also referring
to the kind of action that was taken by the Nigerian Bar Association to boycott the courts. That kind of action,
when it is repeated, and then joined by labor organizations, market women and student organizations, very soon,
the regime will understand that it is completely isolated. So that’s what I mean when I talk about strengthening
civil society, making it function, and then building it up gradually until the moment comes when people get up
and say: enough; we’re terminating this season of anomie or governmental anomie.

Certainly, at my age, I have a very strong,
very carefully calibrated sense of the instrument of violence. We live in a violent world, we cannot say in a purist
way that we’ll never revert to violence. No. We’re saying that violence itself has its time. It requires a very
careful sense of timing. It is something to be avoided by all possible means, because the end of violence cannot
be predicted. So one has to be very, very careful. I know that we debated this in the opposition circles during the Abacha regime. Even in my memoir, I refuse to say categorically
whether we reached that point or not, for the simple reason that I don’t want people who read what we have to write
about that period, to be misled. I’m sorry; but many young people find violence glamorous. As a young man I never
found violence glamorous, even if I considered it a sometime necessity.

When that moment happens, one is then mentally,
psychologically, even philosophically prepared for it. And that’s the essence of Ogun. Ogunis not something arbitrary. Ogun is a metaphor for my formative and creative instincts. Ogun is not a mindless perpetrator of violence. Ogun represents, for me, an acceptance of that sector of human impulse which unfortunately, from time
to time, finds itself the last resort for redressive action. So my attitude to violence is a very careful one. We agonized over this during the Abacha years. I don’t like to talk about
it for the simple reason that, thank goodness, we never reached that actual stage. But to say that we did not debate
it, and even girded ourselves
towards that moment if it had to come, would be a lie. We had to!

ON: Your Nobel acceptance lecture was
titled “This Past Must Address Its Present.” Some Nigerians have the sense that egregious crimes have been committed
in their nation over the past seven or so years. I want to refer to several unsolved murders that have happened
in the country, the abductions of a state governor, the three day wholesale destruction of public property in AnambraState, and so on. Do you see the need, in
the process of moving forward, for Nigerians to go back, and address the immediate past crimes that have committed?

I do, I do, absolutely! The blatant crimes,
for example, are the ones we should begin with —the sack of Anambra…the abduction of its governor, at the time;
what is happening in Ibadan, in OyoState.
Sheer thuggery, the institutionalization
of thuggery as a means of governance...we
have not been through this before; not since the days of NPN, and even then not so blatantly. I would like to go back to an unsolved murder, the most notorious;
the murder of the attorney general of the nation. As I wrote in my article, let’s assume that everybody—all the
accused—were innocent; we still have an explanation coming to us, which we must demand. How can it be that someone
was accused of this crime—and perhaps, he was innocent—but was accused and put in prison to await his trial. One
of the government witnesses who had given evidence in an earlier statement against the accused was placed in the
same cell! We all know how police investigations work—the witness has to be isolated from whoever he or she is
testifying against. But in this particular case, both accused and accuser ended up in the same cell. Then, from
prison, the accused actually filed his papers for election to the Senate!! Now, if, for whatever reason, a candidate
doesn’t take up his or her Senate seat by a certain time, that seat is supposed to be up for grabs. This particular
man’s tenure had expired by the time he was out of detention; but no, no; his seat was kept warm for him. He returns,
and is immediately made the chairman of one of the standing committees. So it is these aspects I want us to concentrate
upon. One might say that these murders haven’t been solved; in that case, we’ll go right back to them. What is
the conduct of state agencies towards one that is accused of a crime during the period of incarceration, and is
that conduct normal? This is how we shall begin to find out the extent, how high up, criminality and impunity go.

OS: You once declared that you would
go after Dele Giwa’s killers
until they were found and exposed. You said the same thing in the case of Bola Ige; as a matter of fact you said you knew some of the people
involved. But for a while now, we haven’t heard from you regarding the pursuit of your declarations.

No…I sent a note to the Justice Oputa panel, and said: ‘here is a piece
that I have. It’s my hope that when this piece is added to all the other pieces, we might actually get to the bottom
of this.’ Nobody has the full picture; that’s the problem with these murders. But if we all contribute what little
pieces we have to the jigsaw puzzle, then we can get a very clear picture. It’s the same thing with Bola Ige’s murder. I am convinced that we have
one or two pieces that would lead to the solution of that crime. In fact I think they’re very potent pieces. I
would like to see a commission on these murders. If this happens, it doesn’t matter much the conclusions of the
commission; the public will unambiguously obtain a series of pictures pointing to the ultimate responsibility.
That is the use of commissions.

And that is one of the reasons why I criticized
my friend Gani for taking the
actions that allowed Babangida
an excuse not to institute a commission. I challenged Babangida at the time, and he said, “What am I supposed to do? Your friend has threatened to go to court
to stop this commission, and so on; if we continue now, they’d say we are not obeying the law.” Even though the
law had not been put in place, Gani
was threatening that if they set up the commission, he would go to court. Commissions are useful things, as I write
in my memoirs. Even the Fela
commission of inquiry that concluded with the issue of an “unknown soldier,” was still a very useful thing, because
through the commission, we knew who gave the orders for the mayhem that was visited upon Fela’sKalakutaRepublic.

OS: Hon. SolaAdeyeye once said that you were extremely close to serving in the Obasanjo regime in his second cabinet, because you were both discussing with Bola Ige to help Obasanjo. You never responded to that statement.

That I was close to serving in Obasanjo’s cabinet?

OS: Yes, that there was some discussion
between you, Bola Ige…

No, you misunderstood that completely.
SolaAdeyeye could never have suggested that I was close to serving
in Obasanjo’s regime. He never
said this; no, not at all. What he said was that Bola Ige—because we discussed with Bola Ige about his serving—and Bola Ige said that we must assist Obasanjo to succeed. That’s all he said. You know SolaAdeyeye is
a very emotional person. After Bola Ige
died, the way he talked about that episode was as if Bola Ige made us swear that we must help. No, it was not like that; it was SolaAdeyeye’s emotive way of speaking. No, what Bola Ige said was that we must do everything to help Obasanjo to succeed, because this is one of the best chances the nation may have in a long term to achieve
many of the goals which he, Bola Ige,
believed in. So it was just part of the conversation. But to serve
in an Obasanjo cabinet…what
for? No, Sola didn’t say any such thing.

OS: Even then, you initially collaborated
at COJA, and then you left,
which led to angry letters between you and Obasanjo?

Yeah; but this wasn’t a paid job. See,
I always say this: I can do anything for anybody as long as I’m not paid. Once I am not paid, I’m quite happy.
Road Safety, the games, which was a big challenge, and which was an opportunity to bring in a lot of artists --
I have no problem with that. This includes what people see at public events. You might have even seen me and Obasanjo chatting together, discussing the
affairs of the nation, with me offering advice on something I believe in. I consider that any opportunity to reduce
the handicap the nation has towards self-fulfillment is an opportunity that should not be wasted. But it does not
mean that I am working for anyone. I will collaborate with anyone who has the benefit of the nation in mind. But
if someone is a proven killer and enjoys killing and torturing, like Abacha, then I won’t go near that person. And, if I see a little bit of virtue in someone, even a little
possibility of achieving things for our people--never myself, never myself--then I’d do what is necessary to help. And I’d do it, step back, and not stay there.

MM: In your 2004 Reith lectures, you
argued that the world has not fundamentally changed after 9-11. Would you agree that the attack on America has increased fear in the world—in view of America’s
foreign policy? Secondly, what advice do you give to Nigerians in “quadruple” exile from our fatherland?

I said that the world still looked the
same to me in reaction to an understated,

Prof. Wole Soyinka

underreported, and undervalued explosion of an airplane over African soil that had taken place many years before,
but which scarcely caused a ripple at the time. After Lockerbie, things began to heat up. Compare this to what
happened in Niger, and the lack of reaction to it by the world. So my comment was really to say that the seismic
impact which other people were claiming at the time, I had actually begun to experience much earlier; when that
plane was exploded over Niger so many years before, but which the world looked upon as just another incident or
accident. That was the contrast I was making.

Of course, the world has changed a lot.
Anybody who travels—and I am a number one frequent flier—knows the difference. I know the difference. What used to be a casual experience—I pick up my bag and go to the airport—has
become… “Oh, my God, not again; I have to go through all these machines…take off your shoes, and so on and so forth.
And then even more profound, the consequences for American policy, and therefore the safety of the world. The world
has become more dangerous as a result of the American response to 9 /11. Much
more dangerous. The threat by fundamentalists has quadrupled. The sense of “we
and they” in the world has become even more polarized as a result of American external policy in response to 9/11.

I have always made a distinction. If somebody
blows up our tallest building in Nigeria, and even if Obasanjo
fails to take action to identify the culprits—I can assure you that within twenty-four hours we’d all be at Aso Rock. You cannot come and violate my
territory. Let’s be objective about it. You cannot come and violate my territory, and then you seek refugee somewhere
in the moon. If I am a true leader, I must pursue you. So the invasion of Afghanistan, the chasing the Talibans out of Afghanistan; to me, this was a case
of war declared against America, and America rightly responded. But when it comes to Iraq, we get to a point where a most indefensible, illegal, and, indeed, criminal and opportunistic
action was taken, and the consequences for the world are very grave. President Bush, from the very beginning, for
personal, visceral, reasons wanted Saddam Hussein out. Bush violated even the United Nations. Whatever face they
want to put on it—they had not passed this resolution and so on—it was the United Nations which had business in
Iraq,
not the United States. The United States is obliged, however powerful it is, to follow the ruling of the United Nations. This kind of unilateral
pursuit of private enemies in the guise of securing the safety of the world—is wrong.

We now have the president of a state who
is still not man enough to admit that he committed a hideous blunder, by invading Iraq, and then by behaving like
an occupying force to the extent that he tells other nations, including the United Nations, “Maybe we can find
some little thing for you to do.” You know, strutting around... And then blunder after blunder, demobilizing the
rank and file of the Iraqi army. It’s not the rank and file we should be after; soldiers have to take orders. And
so you create a complete state of anarchy in the state—which, of course, spreads itself to surrounding areas, affects
many other countries…poisons relationships between people, creates suspicion...so it’s a very completed scenario.
I am afraid that were America not so powerful, George Bush would be on trial in one of these international courts—and whose protocols
incidentally, America refuses to sign whilst insisting that other people be taken to the courts. So what kind of morality
is that? To tell everybody, if you don’t release this person to the authority of the international court, you’ll
face sanction? In the meantime, you refuse to sign the protocols; you insist that your own nationals must be exempted.
This kind of double standard is really what fuels the anger of the rest of the world.

MM: Could you please speak to the predicament
of the Nigerian Diaspora?

There is a medical association, in the
United States, of Nigerian doctors, and every year they go to Nigeria for about a month to donate their services to villages. They conduct operations, sometimes, by
candlelight. A team is sent out every year. They’ve been doing this for several years now, and I find it a very
useful way of gradually reintegrating oneself back in the nation, if one has been a victim of ‘quadruple’ exile.
The exiles must find a way of beginning to come back. I am not as sanguine as I used to be, when, for instance,
I persuaded a number of professionals to actually uproot and return home.

After Obasanjo handed over power to Shagari, I persuaded a number of people to return. One medical
doctor sold his lucrative practice in Chicago, crated all his equipment, went back, and set up shop in Surulere. In fact I had wanted him to come to Ibadan, selfishly, to look after my friend, Bola Ige. But he decided to set up in Surulere. Fair enough, it doesn’t matter;
stay where you want. About a month later, he moved back to Chicago. He left his equipment in Nigeria. “As a professional, I want job satisfaction,” he told me. “I cannot operate in circumstances like
this where power goes off every other day, and I can’t even find fuel for the generator I’ve got. Then drugs are
not available for follow-up treatment.”He left his entire equipment, very valuable, in Nigeria, saying: “I want to go back to the U.S and start over.” Since then I have been very careful about inviting anybody to pull up roots, and
come back home. But I think the process of beginning to feel yourself a part of your society—coming to Nigeria,
for instance, to give workshops on literature for a month or so, and then returning to your place of residence
gradually prepares you for the moment, possibly, when you feel, well, maybe I’m ready now to come home, totally.

I have the same fear you have--that expression
is a very poignant one--that anybody who builds a house now in Nigeria is just building a mausoleum. Each time I go to my house in Abeokuta,
I ask myself, not in those very words, but I ask myself, “Did I build this thing as my mausoleum, this foundation
house where I was supposed to host some writers or researchers every year and then live up the land?”

OS: I hope you don’t mind my asking
this; but how much are you worth, sir? You’ve won the Nobel Prize, and profess in a great many universities. According
to Marwa he wrote a book, became
a millionaire, and now owns an airline. I don’t even know that you own a car?

I can tell you…I should be worth more,
by the way. I have two houses. One is in

Abeokuta, which I built myself;
one which I finished paying for recently in Lagos -- a house that I have had to get, because I am moving back home,
and my family can’t live in the ‘bush’ where I live in Abeokuta. I can tell you how I lectured, sweated, and just finished paying for that house, about September,
last year. I was quite amused during Beko’s funeral when I read that somebody was writing about the Kuti family--our branch, and other branches--and he wrote: “Apart from WoleSoyinka who earns millions lecturing…” I wanted to grab him and say: okay, you and I; we’re going to search
for those millions; I will buy you a ticket, and we must go find the millions. Oya, let’s go!

You are right; I don’t own a car in Nigeria, but I have one which I use
in the States, here. I don’t own a car in Nigeria. Someone gives me a car each time I arrive home. So that’s what I own. Of course, here--this is
very interesting—here, I also have a house; but you know what having a house here is like…you know what paying
a mortgage is like. That house that I have here, I can tell you, is worth close to minus $350,000—that’s the amount
still left to pay on that loan. But I don’t worry. The day they want their house, I will say “take your house.”
I have royalties which come in every year—but don’t forget on-hand royalties as well; when you get an advance,
and it is taken off [one’s earned royalties]. By summer, I know that I can safely expect some 8,000 pounds from
sales, and so on. In the States, it’s mostly unearned royalties, I’m afraid. I’d say the amount that comes into
my pocket—and I can give you my account to look at any time you want—I don’t think it’s more than twenty thousand
dollars altogether. Make it at the most, $25,000 a year in royalties.

ON: So your major income comes
from lectures?

From lecturing, yes.

ON: Let me end with a double-pronged
question. You have described your generation as wasted. Some, in my generation, however, feel more wasted than
yours, and many more see your generation as having wasted itself, and then ours, in addition. How do you observe
the generation that came after yours? Finally, when you examine the state of African writing—fiction, non-fiction,
poetry, et cetera; do you see a robust and vibrant literature?

I think there is very robust literature
coming out from Nigeria, especially. Nigeria is actually bursting with creativity! Not just literature, but music, the plastic arts, painting—I
have seen some very dynamic work coming from painters in Nigeria. Lots of beautiful poetry, solid work... I read a longish and quite exciting novel that will be
published soon by another young writer. So I am very optimistic about the state of literature in Africa.

I believe that every generation wastes
itself. I don’t agree that one generation wastes another. Your generation has been busy wasting itself either by
collaboration or by refusal—and I mean this very seriously—to take a very active role in any political situation.
But I cannot say I am optimistic or pessimistic. I think all my life I’ve always said that I am a realist.
I’m also pragmatic. If something is wrong, then it has to be fixed. And it’s got to be fixed through a strategy
that ensures, first of all, that it doesn’t get broken again; that it lasts. That task, I have to say, is for future
generations.

Thank you sir, for sitting down for
this conversation!

You are welcome.

Key: OkeyNdibe =ON

OmoyeleSowore = OS

MM = Michael Mbabuike

Disclaimer: The views expressed in the interview are not necessarily those of the Chinua Achebe Foundation.
The Chinua Achebe Foundation, an intellectual and cultural organization, believes in the right of every Nigerian
to express their opinion.